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November 14, 2018

Image: Hubble spots a lonely blue dwarf

Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA
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Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

This captivating image from the聽NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope's聽Wide Field Camera 3聽shows a lonely dwarf galaxy 100 million light-years away from Earth. This image depicts the聽blue compact dwarf galaxy ESO 338-4, which can be found in the constellation of聽Corona Australis聽(the Southern Crown).

Blue compact dwarf galaxies take their name from the intensely blue star-forming regions that are often found within their cores. One such region can be seen embedded in ESO 338-4, which is populated with bright, young stars voraciously consuming hydrogen. These massive stars are doomed to a short existence, despite their vast supplies of . The聽nuclear reactions聽in the cores of these stars will burn through these supplies in only millions of years鈥攁 mere blink of an eye in astronomical terms.

The young, blue stars nestled within a cloud of dust and gas in the center of this image are the result of a recent聽galaxy merger聽between a wandering galaxy and ESO 388-4. This galactic interaction disrupted the clouds of gas and dust surrounding ESO 338-4 and led to the聽rapid formation聽of a new population of stars.

Provided by NASA

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